You heard it folks, I’m officially done with cigarettes.
It’s been a nasty and long relationship, but I’ve whipped out my white flag to shake around and have surrendered.
I’m not buying anymore tobacco.
Hopefully ever.
It sucks.
I’ll be honest.
I love smoking.
But I’ve been smoking since I was 16 years old.
And I was starting to get super wheezy.
I’ve been wheezy for a few years now.
It’s gone away pretty quickly.
And I keep seeing these quit smoking ads and they’ve been replaying in my mind.
The last few weeks I haven’t been satisfied with a single cigarette.
Like, I’d smoke one and feel like I just need another one right away.
Cig after cig after cig I’d just need another one and another one.
And I realized I was chain smoking.
And that’s when I cut myself off.
Because no matter how many I smoked, it wasn’t satisfying.
And that’s the thing with cigarettes, they’re satisfying.
That’s the whole pull of them.
Unsatisfied with life?
Smoke a cigarette.
Want to feel better about life?
Smoke a cigarette.
I smoke one and feel smarter, better, less angry, less anxious.
But not the past couple of weeks.
It’s been cig after cig of unsatisfied cravings.
And that’s where I draw the fucking line.
It wasn’t serving me anymore.
I never thought I’d quit.
But, here I am, quitting.
Turns out, there are some studies that say Buspirone helps with smoking cessation and that’s my newest anti-anxiety medication.
And they say it works especially well in the cases of cocaine abuse, and that’s been a problem for me in the past as well as opiates.
Curious.
Some studies say that it mainly helps with the anxieties that are linked to quitting smoking.
Which I couldn’t agree with more.
Makes total sense.
It has absolutely helped me.
The lower dose I was on for the first month and a half – 5mg, twice daily, didn’t do much to help me quit.
But when my psych NP bumped that up to 15mg, twice a day, within weeks I was sick of smoking.
It’s wild how so many medications can have terrible side effects until Buspirone popped up with an awesome one.
I was hoping one of these meds could get me off the cigarettes for good.
I’ve been seeing a ton of quit smoking ads too, on tv.
The ones with people who have distorted voices and partial missing chins and jaws from tobacco use.
I kept threatening to call the quit number, but never did.
But I’m grateful that I got sick of cigarettes.
I didn’t think that would ever happen.
Cigarettes corner people.
They get you to need them when you’re down.
And then they keep you there while giving you a false sense of satisfaction.
I don’t think a day will ever pass now where I don’t want a smoke.
I think it’ll always be there until enough time has passed.
How much time that is, I have no idea.
But I bet I’ll always want one.
I bet it won’t go away quickly.
At least it feels like it right now.
I mean, it’s been over 20 years of turning to cigarettes every day, tens of times per day.
I got some nicotine gum and a juul and they’ve been lifesavers.
They’ve been really helpful tools that I felt bad about needing at first.
I felt really shitty this morning about needing help with this.
But hell, I’d rather be addicted to a gum temporarily than keep smoking.
I’d rather hit a juul a couple of times than light up a smoke.
I’m sure I smell better already.
Ha!
I just feel like an adult now.
I feel like I’ve been stuck at age 26 for a long time and I’m just now busting out of that feeling.
I think it’s from the mental illness.
Thinking I’m invincible still in some areas has been eating me up inside.
I feel like if I can quit smoking, I can do anything!
The world feels a bit more controllable, even though I know it’s not.
But I’m grateful for that feeling today.
I feel like I can do anything now.
I have to thank not only my hard work, but the help of medications again.
If the Buspirone didn’t help aid smoking cessation, I wouldn’t be here right now.
I wouldn’t be in this position.
I wouldn’t be able to step back and see that what I’m doing isn’t helpful.
Because I still have a hard time seeing what’s best for me.
But the meds are helping for sure.
And this is just another example of that.
Today, I’m a non-smoker.
And I never thought I’d say that.
– Keren

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